When Jackie Robinson Voted for Nixon and Rebuked Malcolm X

Weatherman2020

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Mar 3, 2013
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As Biden would have told Jackie - you ainā€™t black!


Major League Baseball is gearing up to celebrate the 75th anniversary of Jackie Robinson breaking the sportā€™s color barrier.

After becoming the first black player in the big leagues on April 15, 1947, when Martin Luther King Jr. was 18, Robinson went on to have a Hall of Fame career, batting .313 lifetime and playing in six World Series. His jersey has been retired by every team, and all MLB players, managers, coaches, and umpires will wear Jackie Robinsonā€™s No. 42 in Dodger blue on April 15.

As a fascinating and well-researched new book points out, Robinson (1919-72) was also outspoken about politics. In ā€œTrue: The Four Seasons of Jackie Robinson,ā€ sports writer Kostyra Kennedy reminds readers that while Robinson was a devoted friend to King and a supporter of the civil rights movement, he also voted for Richard Nixon in 1960 and rebuked a militant black leader, Malcolm X.

ā€œThe Democratic Party, Robinson felt, took the Black vote too quickly for granted,ā€ Mr. Kennedy writes. . . .

Robinsonā€™s endorsement of Nixon cost him. At the time, he was retired from baseball and acting as a goodwill ambassador for Chock full oā€™Nuts and a columnist for the New York Post. According to ā€œTrue,ā€ the Nixon endorsement forced ā€œa temporary leave of absenceā€ at the coffee company and ended his column. . . .

Soon after, Robinson began writing a syndicated column that appeared in such publications as the New York Amsterdam News and the Chicago Defender. According to ā€œTrue,ā€ Robinson ā€œchastised Malcolm X, objecting to his brand of militancy and to his separatist views.ā€ Malcolm X responded ā€œwith unveiled ire,ā€ rebuking Robinson ā€œfor his allegiance to his ā€˜white bossā€™ and his ā€˜white benefactorsā€™ and for supporting Nixon, and for his general approach.ā€ Malcolm X charged that Robinson would ā€œnever take an interest in anything in the Negro community until the white man himself takes an interest in it.ā€

Robinson shot back, ā€œComing from you an attack is a tribute,ā€ and added that he was proud of his association with baseballā€™s Branch Rickey and with New Yorkā€™s governor, Nelson Rockefeller, for whom Robinson would work.

The book also notes that when he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1962, Robinson ā€œasked that his plaque make no mention of his role in integrating baseball.ā€ Robinsonā€™s wife Rachel later had it changed to describe the tremendous courage Robinson displayed in 1947 and after.
 
Sammy Davis Jr also supported Nixon
Cost him a lot of black fans

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Different time and different eraā€¦

There are plenty on both sides that wouldnā€™t have made in politics back then and plenty from back then that wouldnā€™t dare be in politics in today time.
 
while Robinson was a devoted friend to King and a supporter of the civil rights movement, he also voted for Richard Nixon in 1960 and rebuked a militant black leader, Malcolm X.

While Robinson supported MLK he opposed more outspoken black protests
He didnā€™t like Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali, the Olympic protests
 

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